The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1901

Page 73 of 292

 

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 73 of 292
Page 73 of 292



The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 72
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The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 74
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Page 73 text:

39 desire to be one of your members for the sake of my ancestry, and for the sake especially of the uncle after whom I was named, who was one of the noblest men I have ever known. If he had been my father instead of being my uncle it would havebeen all right, so far as eligibility- to the Holland Society is concerned. But while every drop of his blood was Dutch, in my case it is only every other drop, and that is maternal blood-which does n't count. While we are speaking of names I would say, en passamzf, that the large number of Dutch names of places, steamships, etc., ending in a syllable that has an imprecatory sound are not even remotely intended to -suggest profanity, and therefore the movement to replace this syllable by a deprecatory stroke is entirely unnecessary and uncalled for. I am led to make this remark from sympathy with a demure young lady, in one of our cross-town cars, who asked the conductor for a transfer to Amster- dash Avenue g and when the conductor didn't seem to know 'what she meant she stammered again, Amster-dash Avenue 5 my father will not let me say the other word. I could have thrashed that father ! u But, to our toast. y If you call that a toast I call it a plate of toast well piled up, and buttered at that. But it is only in consonance with the entire history and achievements of Holland in the past that so small a country should evoke so large a toast. The Dutch character is favorable to the prose- cution of discoveries. It is characteristic of the Dutchman that he goes slow but always gets there., The only exception to this, which 1135 become historical, is the Flying Dutchman, who ffied 3 more rapid method of progression and never got there ! y

Page 72 text:

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I'I u I I



Page 74 text:

al 40 To begin with, the Qutch discovered .our Hne harbor, and with that discovery is fairly included the city and all that thereuis in and about it, When the HaMM0on sailed into Manhattan Bay, all that we now see about us immediately became possible, and in an important sense Henryk Hudgon discovered the Greater New York, with its bustling streets, its imposing buildings, its hideous sky- scrapers, its Statue of Liberty, .its bridge, its high- stoop houses, its immaculate city government, its impeccable police, its statesmen, its poets, its orators, and that greatest last-century Dutchman, -Our Own Chauncey. I am sorry to miss him here to-night, the most reticent man since the days of VVilliam the Silent! Yet there are occasions on which our Chauncey is heard to speak, and speaks to be heard, and this fact has become known- far and wide, and to all classes of society. It is even said that a tramp succeeded in securing a meal from the wife ofthe lodge-keeper at Chestnut Grove, the summer home of lVIr. Depew on the Hudson, by promising to tell her a story, and adding the suggestion, lVIe and Chauncey Depew always talks best after dinner ! I referred a moment ago to the high-stoop houses so characteristic of New York, but which I am sorry to say are doomed, and will soon be as obso- lete as the practice of making calls on New Year's Day. And all this came about .by a very simple accident. It was one of these high-stoop houses that had long been the residence of a blue-blooded I-lollander, which had fallen more or less into bad repair, and during theabsence of the family on a visit to their friends in I-Iolland, the top of the stoop became. detached from its connections and ' ,+,. li 41 kydowrl iff, dl-5 P 1 file sti to ixteiwnis vllwng if ,fjzellpon gndvmdii ' idvlwe dv' ' W nCiE0fflC3lJ0Ul hoax, 13 it W Lhaggell gfpstothep . bf I gist ill Pmpnbasemmi iid into the W Sufillglw ,ei diff M 'hiausdi dll Jaflfll ml mtsiHiciC11lll'3muc m piuters their Ph? lmaj'Sll' something ah' nimrr Butler at if 3 tlagahout tht YW I- H' f1ee1,red'tiled f00l5 Ili Si iree:,nortl1aI in the 1 pitiiforls were lreely M liieryfurnaoxs in Ili! mt! lienameof lmmh inetoast Hg 13 W llnicroswpg, gm, is . llreached Nile the MILI d lemntquifo and llllljl victim: ad lllfliiyesl as it to il i11nuti:1hatad::: I wh lvlffeymemre tk d M 'lhuch an' Q inthf' Wg' -rf Q . -v: R., -as, Xp A ' ii i

Suggestions in the The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 28

1901, pg 28

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 33

1901, pg 33

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 12

1901, pg 12

The Holland Society of New York - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 206

1901, pg 206


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